Haidt, Jonathan. (2001). The emotional dog and its rational tail: A
social intuitionist approach to moral judgment. Psychological Review, 108 (4),
814.
Haidt
presents a great deal of information in his article The Emotional Dog and its
Rational Tail—all having to do with the social intuitionist model and how it
relates to moral judgement. The author gives us four explanations on why we should
question or doubt the relevance of reason: “The Dual Process Problem, The
Motivated Reasoning Problem, The Post Hoc Problem, and The Action Problem. While
all explanations make valid points, I felt that I related most to the motivated
reasoning problem. After re-reading, I realize I may align with this one the
most because I’ve grown up in a family of attorneys. Haidt also provides good
examples of relatedness motives and coherence motives.
The other
two questions have to do with Ecological Variation and Consilience. According
to Haidt on consilience, “the degree to which facts and theories link up across
disciplines to create a common groundwork of explanation” (2001, pg. 829). No
matter what your opinion on this article, the one thing that holds true is the
notion that this day in age, there are a plethora of new ways to think about
moral judgement and the forces that drive moral reasoning.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis theory was interesting to me knowing that we can make such quick, knee jerk decisions based soley on our moral makeup. To think that our decisions are based on reason is like thinking the tail is wagging the dog. I am a visual learner so that vivid description really helped me a lot! * Micki Nelson * not 'anonymous'!
ReplyDelete